Initial-Position-Driven Opposite Directional Transport of Water Droplet on Wedge-Shaped Groove

Nanoscale ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shaoqian Hao ◽  
Xie Zhang ◽  
Zheng Li ◽  
Jianlong Kou ◽  
Fengmin Wu

Transport direction of water droplets on a functionalized surface is of great significance due to its wide applications in microfluidics technology. The prevailing view is that a water droplet on...

2019 ◽  
Vol 894 ◽  
pp. 104-111
Author(s):  
Thanh Long Le ◽  
Jyh Chen Chen ◽  
Huy Bich Nguyen

In this study, the numerical computation is used to investigate the transient movement of a water droplet in a microchannel. For tracking the evolution of the free interface between two immiscible fluids, we employed the finite element method with the two-phase level set technique to solve the Navier-Stokes equations coupled with the energy equation. Both the upper wall and the bottom wall of the microchannel are set to be an ambient temperature. 40mW heat source is placed at the distance of 1 mm from the initial position of a water droplet. When the heat source is turned on, a pair of asymmetric thermocapillary convection vortices is formed inside the droplet and the thermocapillary on the receding side is smaller than that on the advancing side. The temperature gradient inside the droplet increases quickly at the initial times and then decreases versus time. Therefore, the actuation velocity of the water droplet first increases significantly, and then decreases continuously. The dynamic contact angle is strongly affected by the oil flow motion and the net thermocapillary momentum inside the droplet. The advancing contact angle is always larger than the receding contact angle during actuation process.


1968 ◽  
Vol 90 (4) ◽  
pp. 445-451 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kwan Lee ◽  
D. J. Ryley

The evaporation of a water droplet, diameter 230-1130μ, suspended on a 50μ diameter glass fiber was measured optically for the following range of variables: droplet Reynolds number 64-250, superheated steam pressure 14.7–29 psia, degrees of superheat 5–61 deg F; velocity 9–39 fps. The correlating equation was found to be Nu¯=2+0.74Re0.5Pr0.33 The apparatus and technique were proven using air as the evaporating medium. Calculations were made of the heating-up period at the beginning, and the drop asphericity at the end of a given test.


Author(s):  
Anish Surendran ◽  
Heuy Dong Kim

Wet compression has been emerging as a prominent method for augmenting net power output from land based gas turbine engine. It is proven more effective than the conventional inlet cooling methods. In this method, fine water droplets are injected just upstream of the compressor impeller. These water droplets absorb the latent heat of evaporation during the compression process of gas-water droplet two-phase flow, consequently reducing the temperature rise. Many gas turbine engineers have performed the feasibility and usefulness studies on this wet compression, but physical understanding on the wet compression process is highly lacking, and related compression flow mechanism remains ambiguous. In the present study, a computational fluid dynamics method has been applied to investigate the wet compression effects on a low speed centrifugal compressor. A Langrangian particle tracking method was employed to simulate the air-water droplet two-phase flow. The power saving achieved with different injection ratio of water droplets has been calculated and it is found that significant saving can be obtained with a water droplet injection ratio of above 3%. The vapor mass fraction varies linearly along the streamwise direction, making the assumption for a constant evaporation rate is valid. With the increase in the injection ratio the polytropic index for compression is coming down. The diffuser pressure recovery has been improved significantly with the wet compression; while the total pressure ratio across the impeller does not improve much. Contrary to the expectation, the evaporation rate is found to be coming down with the increase in the compressor mass flow rate. It is observed that the operating point, at which the peak pressure ratio occurs, shift towards higher mass flow rate during wet compression due to the local recirculation region within the vaneless space between the impeller and diffuser.


2014 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 865856 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roman S. Volkov ◽  
Olga V. Vysokomornaya ◽  
Genii V. Kuznetsov ◽  
Pavel A. Strizhak

The macroscopic regularities of heat and mass transfer and phase transitions during water droplets motion through high-temperature (more than 1000 K) gases have been investigated numerically and experimentally. Water droplet evaporation rates have been established. Gas and water vapors concentrations and also temperature values of gas-vapor mixture in small neighborhood and water droplet trace have been singled out. Possible mechanisms of droplet coagulation in high-temperature gas area have been determined. Experiments have been carried out with the optical methods of two-phase gas-vapor-droplet mixtures diagnostics (“Particle Image Velocimetry” and “Interferometric Particle Imaging”) usage to assess the adequateness of developed heat and mass transfer models and the results of numerical investigations. The good agreement of numerical and experimental investigation results due to integral characteristics of water droplet evaporation has been received.


Author(s):  
Bo Shi ◽  
Shashank Sinha ◽  
Vijay K. Dhir

This paper presents a molecular simulation study of the contact angles of water droplets on a platinum surface for a range of temperatures. SPC/E and Z-P model are used for the water-water and water-platinum potentials, respectively. The results show that the contact angle decreases with the increase of system temperatures and increases when the potential decreases. When the temperature is high enough, the contact angles drop to zero degrees. The results were compared with the argon-virtual solid wall and water-Aluminum results, a similar trend was found.


2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Matilda Backholm ◽  
Daniel Molpeceres ◽  
Maja Vuckovac ◽  
Heikki Nurmi ◽  
Matti J. Hokkanen ◽  
...  

Abstract Superhydrophobicity is a remarkable surface property found in nature and mimicked in many engineering applications, including anti-wetting, anti-fogging, and anti-fouling coatings. As synthetic superhydrophobic coatings approach the extreme non-wetting limit, quantification of their slipperiness becomes increasingly challenging: although contact angle goniometry remains widely used as the gold standard method, it has proven insufficient. Here, micropipette force sensors are used to directly measure the friction force of water droplets moving on super-slippery superhydrophobic surfaces that cannot be quantified with contact angle goniometry. Superhydrophobic etched silicon surfaces with tunable slipperiness are investigated as model samples. Micropipette force sensors render up to three orders of magnitude better force sensitivity than using the indirect contact angle goniometry approach. We directly measure a friction force as low as 7 ± 4 nN for a millimetric water droplet moving on the most slippery surface. Finally, we combine micropipette force sensors with particle image velocimetry and reveal purely rolling water droplets on superhydrophobic surfaces.


2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (39) ◽  
pp. 21685-21688 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kwanghee Jeong ◽  
Peter J. Metaxas ◽  
Joel Chan ◽  
Temiloluwa O. Kuteyi ◽  
Zachary M. Aman ◽  
...  

We present the first quantitative measurements of hydrate formation probability, nucleation rate and growth on a water droplet suspended within a high pressure natural gas by acoustic levitation.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Bekir Sami Yilbas ◽  
Ghassan Hassan ◽  
Hussain Al-Qahtani ◽  
Naser Al-Aqeeli ◽  
Abdullah Al-Sharafi ◽  
...  

Abstract Hydrophobizing of stretchable elastomer surfaces is considered and the reversible behavior of the resulting surface wetting state is examined after stretching and relaxing the hydrophobized samples. The environmental dust are analyzed in terms of elemental constitutes and size, and the dust pinning on the hydrophobized surface is measured. The dust removal mechanisms, by the water droplets on the hydrophobized surface, are investigated. We demonstrated that deposition of functionalized nano-size silica units on the elastomer surface gives rise to hydrophobicity with 135° ± 3° contact angle and low hysteresis of 3° ± 1°. Stretching hydrophobized elastomer surface by 50% (length) reduces the contact angle to 122° ± 3° and enhances the hysteresis to 6° ± 1°. However, relaxing the stretched sample causes exchanging surface wetting state reversibly. Water droplet rolling and sliding can clean the dusty hydrophobized surface almost 95% (mass ratio of the dust particles removed). Droplet puddling causes striations like structures along the droplet path and close examination of the few residues of the dust reveals that the droplet takes away considerably large amount of dust from surface.


Author(s):  
Le Thanh Long ◽  
Jyh Chen Chen ◽  
Nguyen Huy Bich

The migration of a small droplet has been developed during the last two decades due to its applications in industry and high technology such as MEMS and NEMS devices, Lap-On-a- chip, transportation of fluids and so on. There have many studies on this topic in which the energy source as a driving force for the moving of a droplet is quite a difference like heating, magnetics, pressure, electric, laser, and so on. In this study, the numerical computation is used to investigate the transient thermocapillary migration of a water droplet in a micro-channel under the effect of heating source. For tracking the evolution of the free interface between two immiscible fluids, we employed the finite element method with the two-phase level set technique to solve the Navier-Stokes equations and continuity equation coupled with the energy equation. Both the upper wall and the bottom wall of the microchannel are set to be ambient temperature. 40mW heat source is placed at a distance of 1 mm from the initial position of a water droplet. When the heat source is turned on, a pair of asymmetric thermocapillary convection vortices is formed inside the droplet, and the thermocapillary on the receding side is smaller than that on the advancing side. The temperature gradient inside the droplet increases quickly at the initial times and then decreases versus time. Therefore, the actuation velocity of the water droplet first increases significantly and then decreases continuously. Furthermore, the results also indicate that the dynamic contact angle is strongly affected by the oil flow motion and the net thermocapillary momentum inside the droplet. The advancing contact angle is always larger than the receding contact angle during the actuation process.


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